Hollywood celebrities allegedly thought cheating to get their kids into college was as easy as Pi.

Full House star Lori Loughlin and Golden Globe winner Felicity Huffman are charged with mail fraud in a shocking college admission scandal.

According to the New York Post, so far more than 40 people have been indicted in the scam that allegedly allowed their spawn to pose as student-athletes to get into Georgetown, Stanford, Wake Forest University, UCLA and Yale.

Georgetown University was one the schools the schemers allegedly targeted. THE ASSOICATED PRESS

Their actual athletic ability was beside the point. But the rich are different from us.

Also charged is former CFL star and Vancouver businessman David Sidoo who is accused of making two separate $100,000 payments to get someone else to take the SATs for his two sons.

Sidoo has been charged with conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud as part of the FBI’s probe into the help-a-rich-kid scheme.

According to the complaint, the defendants conspired with others to “bribe college entrance exam administrators to facilitate cheating on college entrance exams, to bribe varsity coaches and administrators at elite universities to designate certain applicants as recruited athletes or as other favoured candidates, thereby facilitating the applicants’ admission to those universities and to use the facade of a charitable organization to conceal the nature and source of the bribe payments.”

The suspects are accused of paying bribes of up to $6 million to get their kids into posh schools.

According to court papers, Huffman and hubby William H. Macy “made a purported charitable contribution of $15,000 to participate in the college entrance exam cheating scheme on behalf of her eldest daughter.”

It added: “Huffman later made arrangements to pursue the scheme a second time, for her younger daughter, before deciding not to do so.”

Calls between Huffman and a cooperating witness were recorded.

As for Loughlin, she and her husband allegedly agreed to bribes totalling an eye-popping $500,000 to have their two daughters pretend they were recruits to the USC crew team.

Neither girl participated in the sport

From 2011 through February 2019, parents paid an admissions consultant $25 million to bribe coaches and other administrators so their kids would get in.

The California man allegedly steered the cashola to either an SAT or an ACT administrator.

According to the Post, the scheme even went so far as to establish bogus athletic profiles. Most weren’t even involved in sports.

A former Yale University women’s soccer coach is accused of accepting the bribes.